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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (pancreatitis)
16,014 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The study of a group of 151 patients confirms the diagnostic value of elevated ACCR in pancreatitis, it was positive in 89.4% of them, of the group, 30 were normal, 19 exhibited acute pancreatitis and 102 had various other pathologies. Serious pancreatitis has shown coincide with a long-lasting rise of ACCR, and its rise in the course of the disease was a sign of a new outburst of progressive necrosis. Total unreliability when abnormal creatinine clearance is present was ascertained. The possible mechanism of increase in ACCR has been considered also in connection with the study of the results obtained on a group of patients exhibiting renal insufficiency, gastrointestinal bleeding, acute colecystitis, vesicular lithiasis and obstructive jaundice.
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PMID:[Correlation of the clearance of amylase and creatinine in acute pancreatitis and other pathologies]. 617 47

In five patients with pancreatitis, obstructive jaundice was relieved by internal drainage of the biliary tract with an endoprosthesis inserted by percutaneous transhepatic technique. The average duration of treatment was 3.5 months. The endoprosthesis were removed by means of a duodenoscope, and jaundice did not recur.
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PMID:Internal endoprosthesis as treatment of obstructive jaundice in pancreatitis. 645 80

Obstructive jaundice in patients with chronic pancreatitis still constitutes a surgical problem deserving the attention of many specialized centers throughout the world. Out of a series of 149 patients operated upon for chronic pancreatitis, 45 (30.2%) with common duct stricture secondary to pancreatic disease have been studied in this series. Eleven patients (24.4%) had transient jaundice, eleven (24.4%) persistent cholestasis and six patients (13.3%) presented cholestasis with cholangitis. Seventeen patients (37.7%) were considered to have asymptomatic biliary tract stenosis. In 37 patients, pancreatic and biliary tract surgery were performed at the same time. There were two postoperative deaths (4.4%) and the late mortality was 9.3%. Choledochojejunostomy was preferred in the treatment of biliary stricture associated with pancreatitis. Cholecystojejunostomy provides inadequate biliary decompression and should not be used in the treatment of these patients. When a pancreatojejunostomy needs to be performed in association with biliary tract decompression, a double intestinal loop technique should be used because it is associated with less morbidity and mortality.
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PMID:Surgical treatment of biliary complications from calcifying chronic pancreatitis. 650 Aug 80

Five cases that illustrate the spectrum of biliary complications of pancreatitis and pancreatic pseudocyst are discussed. Obstructive jaundice, hemobilia, and bilious ascites were the major problems in these five patients. Sonography, transhepatic cholangiogram, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography, operative cholangiography, and arteriography are important in establishing the diagnosis and planning the treatment. Three patients had biliary obstruction caused by chronic pancreatitis, a pancreatic pseudocyst, or both. Two patients had a fistula between the common duct and the pseudocyst. Simple decompression of the pseudocyst was curative for only one patient. Three patients required decompression of the biliary tract, which emphasizes the need for intraoperative cholangiography. One patient required a Whipple operation to control hemorrhage but died in the immediate postoperative period. The operative findings determine the specific procedures for biliary tract decompression and pseudocyst drainage.
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PMID:Common bile duct complications of pancreatitis evaluation and treatment. 660 May 27

Pancreatic pseudocyst is a relatively rare complication of pancreatitis with a reported incidence of 1 to 5 per cent in patients with pancreatitis. The 5-year experience with pancreatic pseudocyst at Saint Francis Hospital and Medical Center and Mount Sinai Hospital has been reviewed in an effort to determine optimum diagnostic and therapeutic techniques. Twenty-eight patients were treated for this problem during the period of June 1976 through June 1981 with one death. All patients had operative therapy, with internal drainage being the procedure of choice. The most common presenting symptom was abdominal pain. The most useful diagnostic study proved to be ultrasonography. Complications occurred in nine patients (32%). These included bleeding, obstructive jaundice, infection, rupture, and recurrence.
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PMID:Pancreatic pseudocyst. 663 97

The presentation of ampullary carcinoma as acute pancreatitis has been documented only in scattered reports but may be more common than is generally appreciated. More typically this uncommon gastrointestinal neoplasm presents with obstructive jaundice, weight loss, anorexia, and nonspecific abdominal pain. A case of ampullary carcinoma is presented in which the clinical features and computed tomographic appearance were those of relapsing, acute pancreatitis. Only after various clinical and radiographic features indicated on ampullary lesion was the etiology of the pancreatitis finally established and a curative resection performed.
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PMID:Carcinoma of the ampulla of Vater presenting as acute pancreatitis. 669 May 7

Only five patients with clinically apparent noncaseating granulomatous pancreatitis have been recorded, so far as we can tell. We describe a patient with noncaseating granulomas confined to the pancreas who developed obstructive jaundice and acute abdominal pain.
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PMID:Isolated granulomatous pancreatitis. 669 95

Wound healing has been investigated in 373 patients undergoing surgery for obstructive jaundice and 760 anicteric patients undergoing cholecystectomy. Reduced wound healing manifested by a higher frequency of wound dehiscence (3.2 per cent vs. 0.5 per cent) and incisional hernia (10.3 per cent vs. 1.8 per cent) was seen in the jaundiced patients. The factors related to this reduced wound healing have been analysed by univariate and multivariate analysis. The independent factors related to wound dehiscence in the 373 jaundiced patients were: an initial low haematocrit (less than 30 per cent), an initial low plasma albumin (less than 30 g/l], a history of pancreatitis, a malignant obstructing lesion, and postoperative wound and/or abdominal sepsis. Haematocrit, albumin and postoperative wound and/or abdominal sepsis were also independent factors for incisional hernia. A raised plasma bilirubin was not of independent significance for either wound dehiscence or incisional hernia. It is concluded that reduced wound healing occurs in jaundiced patients and that this is due to the associated features of poor nutritional status (manifested by low haematocrit and low albumin) and malignancy and not to the raised bilirubin per se.
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PMID:Wound healing in obstructive jaundice. 670 75

We report 10 children with chronic relapsing pancreatitis. These patients can be divided into three groups, based on their clinical history, manifestations, and radiographic findings. Group 1 includes four patients with hereditary pancreatitis; these patients have had recurrent abdominal pain since early childhood, and have a positive family history for pancreatitis. Group 2 includes two patients with clinical and radiographic findings similar to those in patients with hereditary pancreatitis but without a family history of pancreatitis. Group 3 includes four patients with fibrosing pancreatitis who had symptoms and signs of obstructive jaundice. Our report emphasizes three points: (1) that chronic pancreatitis does occur in young children and is most commonly caused by hereditary pancreatitis or fibrosing pancreatitis; (2) that endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatiography is a safe and valuable tool for the study of pancreatic and common bile ducts; and (3) that surgical intervention is indicated to drain the pancreatic duct in patients with hereditary pancreatitis, and sphincterotomy is an effective therapy for patients with fibrosing pancreatitis.
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PMID:Chronic relapsing pancreatitis in childhood. 683 84

To assess our results in the treatment of patients who present with obstructive jaundice due to distal common bile duct stricture after chronic relapsing pancreatitis, 25 patients were seen and operated on for this disease between 1974 and 1981. Our results have demonstrated that provided the diagnosis of the disease is accurate, the management for a large proportion of patients can be simple, safe, and effective. Indeed, choledochoduodenostomy, which has been carried out in combination with either gastrojejunostomy and vagotomy in the presence of duodenal obstruction or with pericystojejunostomy for the treatment of pancreatic pseudocyst, has been shown to be the treatment of choice.
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PMID:Biliary stricture as a complication of chronic relapsing pancreatitis. 685 19


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